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6 answers

1) Circuit Breakers When Tripped Will Sit in the Center Position( Most of the Time)
Very Difficult to Tell Sometimes.
2) Circuit Breakers-Feed Power to More than 1 Outlet. if you have 4 or more outlets without power-it is probably a circuit breaker.
3)Each (Duplex Wall Outlet) has 2 places to plug in Something.If lets say, the top Receptacle doesn't Work but the bottom one does-It's most likely Controlled by a wall Light Switch,and it tells you that you have power from the breaker, or Plugging in part Can Wear out individually. try Wiggling the plug around in the outlet with a hair drier or Vacuum Cleaner as a test.
if hair drier/Vacuum Cleaner works when you wiggle it in the outlet then the outlet is worn out and Needs to Be Replaced.
4) Common Problem-A Gfi is Tripped in the Bathroom or in The Garage in Newer Homes.Find the Power outlet in the garage
( Usually on the wall Common To the House)
You would have to Check the Breaker it'self with a Multi-Meter in the electrical panel.
I Do NOT !!! Recommend you do this yourself!!!
Find an Electrician,Qualified Handy man, or A/c Man To Check the Breakers for
Power. if all else fails.
Good Luck!

2007-05-19 15:32:43 · answer #1 · answered by iceman 2 · 0 0

maximum residences interior the united statesA. and Canada are under pressure with 240 volts, 60 Hz, yet it is executed with 3 wires: a hundred and twenty+, a hundred and twenty-, and nil. enable's call them A, B, and N (for impartial). interior the breaker field, the A twine (from the main considerable line) is going to the left economic employer of circuit breakers, and the B twine is going to the main suitable economic employer. most of the residing house circuits are a hundred and twenty volts, so a million/2 will come from the left part, and a million/2 from the main suitable. those circuits are all linked to the two the A OR B wires and the N twine. maximum of those circuits would be 15 amperes, and the 15 would be stamped on the take care of of each and every breaker. (some may be 20 amps) a number of substantial home equipment require 240 volts, which includes an electric powered dryer, an electric powered range, or an electric powered water heater. To get that, circuits for those home equipment will connect with the A AND B wires, that have a distinction of 240 volts. those circuits many times require 30 amperes, so which you will see 2 15-amp breakers linked mutually. it is the fashion of setup you will could desire to get the main out of the welder you're thinking. you're able to have the main suitable amperage skill in the two the wiring and the circuit breaker(s). in case you have too little, the two the wiring will overheat (melting the insulation and particular inflicting a hearth) or the breaker will keep tripping off. Please get a qualified electrician to place in the main suitable wiring and breaker on your welder.

2016-11-25 01:57:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

a circuit breaker will not control one outlet in a house but a series of outlets and switches.

If you only have one outlet, or even one plug in a double outlet that does not work, you probably also have a light switch somewhere in the same room that seems to turn nothing on.
It is probably in the living room or entry way.
Some builders wire a switch to an outlet for lights when entering or leaving the house.
Plug a working lamp into the outlet that does not work after making sure the lamp is on at another outlet. Then start flipping switches.

2007-05-19 14:58:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First check the breaker to see if it is tripped. Turn the breaker all the way off, then back on. If this doesn't work then be carefull!, you may have an open nuetral. If the outlet is not switched but doesn't work, check it to ground. If you do not have a grounded system, then hook a wire to a grounded source such as a water pipe. Use your meter to check voltage to ground, or use a volt tick to check for live voltage. Usually I find the problem on the last outlet in the circuit that still is working.

2007-05-19 15:40:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If the breaker does not trip, and everything else on that circuit has power, I'd reccomend you change your outlet. Outlet's can become blown on th inside causing them to no longer work. If that doesn't work, than there can be a break in the wire. Hope this helps you out.

2007-05-19 14:53:25 · answer #5 · answered by Justin D 2 · 0 0

Replace the outlet first. It's the cheapest way to start. And that is probably where the job will end.

2007-05-19 21:18:30 · answer #6 · answered by Michael B 5 · 0 0

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